That's exactly the point, it is not Windows the reason not to pick a product, it is the lack of willingness to adapt.I'm afraid I'd be one of those that missed your point as well.
I have a Surface Pro 3, at the time IOS apps were pretty limited and there was no Procreate. So the idea of being able to use a full drawing program like Clip Studio on a tablet form factor was very appealing. It was fun, but the pen wasn't up to snuff for me, and windows itself would drive me nuts at times with endless updates that bogged me down. I still have the Surface Pro, as I found I could play a few Steam games on it, but I went back to iPads because that was comfortable for me.
Since that time of course, Procreate now exists, there is a sub model of Clip Studio that is everything the desktop version is, and Adobe is trying ease their way onto IOS. If one's issue is Windows itself, it's not hard to understand why you wouldn't stay with Surface products. Telling someone that Windows has gotten so much better, is like asking them to keep getting Windows products because they promise it will be better than the last. If one doesn't want to stick around and/or pay the cost for the hope Windows will get to be where they need it to be, it makes sense why they avoid it.
You yourself admit as much, as Windows has gotten to a place you really enjoy. You stuck with the products because of work reasons so you could see the development & improvements because you had to, and now finally Windows is enjoyable enough you want to make it your main. That's great for you, but it's also how many feel about Apple / IOS products if they've used Windows as well and it didn't work out for them.
You highlight the successes of the Surface Book & point out some lows, something you can see in abundance as well on this forum about Mac products as well.
When I switched from Windows to OS X at the beginning it wasn't an easy task, I did it because the HW was what I thought it was worth, was it hard? YES, was it worth it? YES.
People use Windows as an excuse, they lack the willingness to try, adapt their workflow (same reason why for many the iPad is ONLY a consumption device while the one that wanted to adapt are able to replace a computer with it).
iOS for iPads and Windows for Surfaces are the excuses.
Now if you try something and it simply is not up to the task is a thing, but to simply say Windows is the reason why I do not touch a computer, is plain silly.
ANY switch (Adobe / Affinity, PowerPC / Intel you name it...) takes time to adjust, some do it better than others, and some are not stuck in 1995 .
I mean I agree to disagree if there is some substance to the argument.
As you suggested, apps are more important, you can run Adobe, Affinity or similar prodiuct the same exact way on Win / Mac.
Now if you tell me your job depends on Final Cut, I can definitely agree, but even then, there might be room for debate, unless it is a client requisite.
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